DE4CC0DE-5FC3-4494-BCBF-4D50B00366B5
Supply Chain

EU Scolds Mercosur For Stalling Ahead Of Trade Accord End-Game

By Publications Checkout
Share this article
EU Scolds Mercosur For Stalling Ahead Of Trade Accord End-Game

The European Union’s farm chief pressed Latin American countries to offer market access for EU wines, spirits, olive oil and dairy goods to help seal a free-trade agreement that has been in the works for two decades.

European Agriculture Commissioner Phil Hogan said the Mercosur group of Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay has failed to reciprocate a “generous” EU proposal on 5 December to accept hundreds of thousands of metric tons a year of beef, ethanol, sugar and citrus fruits from the four nations.

He’s due to meet Mercosur ministers in Buenos Aires on 10 December as part of a World Trade Organisation gathering.

“The ball is in the court of the Mercosur countries,” Hogan said in an interview in his Brussels office on Friday. “We would expect them to complete the offer that they promised.”

Negotiations

Europe is racing to wrap up negotiations on a commercial pact with Mercosur within weeks as part of a global market-opening drive meant to counter the protectionist stance of US President Donald Trump.

ADVERTISEMENT

The EU-Mercosur talks began almost two decades ago, faltered and were re-started in 2010.

Earlier on Friday, EU and Japanese negotiators put the finishing touches on a free-trade accord that marks the bloc’s second such deal - Canada was the first - with a fellow member of the Group of Seven leading industrialised nations.

An EU-Mercosur agreement would be one of the bloc’s biggest, with two-way trade in goods valued at €85 billion last year.

The European Commission, the EU’s executive arm, proposed this week to let Mercosur export to the bloc at reduced duties 70,000 tons of beef, 600,000 tons of ethanol and 100,000 tons of sugar annually, according to Hogan. The proposal also includes “full liberalization of citrus fruit and juices,” he said.

ADVERTISEMENT

“We have got nothing in return,” Hogan said. “This was a very big surprise, but also not exactly helpful toward conveying the view that we are narrowing our positions toward an end-game situation."

"At this stage, I don’t see an end-game negotiation without the Mercosur countries completing what they had promised and committed on agriculture.”

Buenos Aires Talks

EU Trade Commissioner Cecilia Malmstrom told reporters on Friday in Brussels that the negotiations with Mercosur were “advancing a lot” and “we are very close,” while “there is still work to do.”

The odds of signing a free trade agreement either at the WTO meeting in Buenos Aires which starts on Sunday or at the Mercosur summit in Brasilia on 21 December are between possible and probable, an Argentine government official, who asked not to be named because the talks are private, said earlier this week.

ADVERTISEMENT

“There will be a deal, but I’m not sure whether it will be signed in Buenos Aires or a few weeks later,” Brazil’s Foreign Relations Minister Aloysio Nunes said in an interview on Friday.

News by Bloomberg, edited by ESM. Click subscribe to sign up to ESM: The European Supermarket Magazine.

Get the week's top grocery retail news

The most important stories from European grocery retail direct to your inbox every Thursday

Processing your request...

Thanks! please check your email to confirm your subscription.

By signing up you are agreeing to our terms & conditions and privacy policy. You can unsubscribe at any time.